NPR

'I Rue The Day We Ever Became Farmers': In Rural India, A Struggle To Survive

"The farmer dies feeding this country, but no one fights for the farmer," says a 60-year-old woman whose son, an onion farmer, committed suicide. He was $40,000 in debt. Her husband died days later.
Sanjay Sathe, 44, grows onions on about an acre of land on a roadside in India's Maharashtra state. His family farm prospered under his grandfather and father, but now he has to raise goats because the price of onions keeps falling.

Onion farmer Sanjay Sathe was so disappointed with how little he made from his recent harvest that he decided to pull a stunt: He sent a money order for his entire profit — a paltry $15 — to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who's running for re-election this spring. Sathe wanted to show him the meager earnings Indian farmers must live on.

Sathe, 44, grows onions on about an acre of land along a roadside about 130 miles from Mumbai, in rural Maharashtra. This little farm prospered under Sathe's grandfather and father. But now the family has a

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